Charles W. Morgan

STEPHEN DUNN / TPN Handout

Three young visitors poke their heads out of the captain's cabin window inside the Charles W. Morgan, the last surviving wooden whaling ship in the world. The vessel, built in 1841, is undergoing a three-year restoration and sits in dry dock at the Henry B. DuPont preservation shipyard at Mystic Seaport in Mystic, Conn.

Three young visitors poke their heads out of the captain's cabin window inside the Charles W. Morgan, the last surviving wooden whaling ship in the world. The vessel, built in 1841, is undergoing a three-year restoration and sits in dry dock at the Henry B. DuPont preservation shipyard at Mystic Seaport in Mystic, Conn. (STEPHEN DUNN / TPN Handout)

Three young visitors poke their heads out of the captain's cabin window inside the Charles W. Morgan, the last surviving wooden whaling ship in the world. The vessel, built in 1841, is undergoing a three-year restoration and sits in dry dock at the Henry B. DuPont preservation shipyard at Mystic Seaport in Mystic, Conn.